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Time to Play

Check out the eye-opening insights on children and play revealed by our study with Gallup!

The Scoop

This favorite collection of 100 wooden blocks comes in four colors and nine shapes. Little builders will delight in stacking, building, and knocking down in countless colorful combinations, while gaining invaluable practice with fine motor skills and dexterity, color and shape recognition, and pre-math skills.

My granddaughter is used to magna tiles and was less interested in building with these blocks than the ones she has at home. However, I will try to dream up some interesting things we can build together. We've only played with them once.

This is a very nice wooden block set. Pieces were smaller than I thought they were going to be but my grandchildren didn't seem to mind a bit. They had lots of fun playing with them. They are very good quality.

Was given these blocks as a gift for my 2 year old, couldn't wait to open the box and get building but unfortunately on opening every other block is stuck together. Some can be pulled apart although this removes some paint but others are actually stuck too hard together. Quite disappointing as expected better quality.

Encourage beginning counting skills by helping kids to count how many blocks there are of each color. Sort by shape and count how many there are of each.

Ask kids to build something using a single color. Then, challenge them to build a structure where no blocks of the same color touch each other.

Place four blocks in front of kids and ask them to describe them to you. Have kids close his their eyes and remove one of the blocks. Ask them to tell you which is missing! Increase difficulty by starting with more blocks and by removing more than one.

Challenge kids to build the tallest structure they can! To make it a game, divide the blocks evenly and see who can build the tallest, longest, widest, or most unusual structure.

Build a structure with kids using as many of the blocks as possible. Ask them to tell a story about it. For instance, if it looks like a house, who lives there? If it's more like a bridge or a road, where does it go and who is traveling on it? Maybe it's a wall -- who lives on each side and why might they need it?